Red Rose Tea at reduced prices Red Label, Urange I ekoe, \ 2 Ib. ID. to play Bridge AUCTION 4 CONTRACT by Wynne Ferguson Amhor of "PRACTICAL AUCTION BR1OCE* SHE DARE NOT EAT BUTTER Acid Stomach Since Childhood ARTICLE N< ROXON FLY CATCHER Gets the fij every time < Always use best oil- say expert mechanics When you consider how much yon for your sewing machine, vac- cleaner, lawn mower, washer, other expensive devices, don't you . think It's foolish to try to economize . oil? The very best costs only a fow cents a year and is really cheap- . tat In the long nin. 3-in-One, *. scientific blend of min- eral, vegetable and animal oils, la 4 auuJe especially for lubrication of kousehold devices. It cleans and pro- ' tecta as well as lubricates. 3-in-One . eoat more to make than ordinary oil tat It costa less to use. If you knew what expert mechanics know about H, you'd never use anything else around the house. At good drug, gro- cery, hardware, department and gen- eral stores. For your protection, look lor the trade mark "3-in-One" printed fm Red on every package. Miracle I wonder like a child how this can be, How every grumbling Spring, though men forget, A summer wisdom works behind tie wet To bring the rose unfailing to the tree. Day after day I watch till dark, and she, A star of crimson in a cave of jet Still haunts the more. Unappre- hended yet, Behind the veils of sleep she burns tor me. And dreaming bow my dear was once a child Who drew the common air with scarce a stir, While men destruction on destruction piled, Or greatly gave. I marvel how, un- sought, Softly aa drawing breath or taking thought. This haunting rose of womanhood came to her. Anon, in the Glasgow Herald. THE BOON OF SPRING How many more springs may I hope What New York Is Wearing BY AXNEBELLE WORTHIXGTON lllutirattd Dressmaking Lesson Fur- nished With Ectry Pattern Which are the easier to handle, weak hands ,;T strnn? hands? Most players probably will reply that strong hands are easier to hid and to play and that is probably true. We.ik hands, as a rule, offer more problems than the strong ones, but the latter are frequently hard to handle. The writer was watching a new Club member playing the other day and, as dealer, he passed a very strong hand. When asked why he did so, he replied: "The hand was so big. I didn't know This is not an learn 1 to be as what to do with it." uncommon fault, so careful in bidding and playing the strong as you are with the weak ones. In the play, particularly, one is apt to become careless big hand; but remember tii.it bad habile, are hard to break. You may lose a trick or so on a big hand and still go game but. if you are just as care- j .--- on the next hand, the trick you | lose may prevent you from going ] game. The only way to become a ( good Auction or Contract player !s to play every hand, strong or weak, forj the maximum. Concentration on- what you are doing will win more rub- ' bers for you than any other one thing, i The following hands were played in a recent duplicate tournament and the bidding showed a wide diversity of NOW ENJOYS LIFE- THANKS TO KRUSCHEN Don't ban a looil because it .lisajjrees with you. In nine cases out <>( ten, it isn't the food that's at fault it's \<mr digestion. Put that right. ;irl you ran eat to the order of your appetite. That is just wliat happened with this woman : " I have Teen taking KniM-hrii Salts for about Miree years. I began its use for rheumatism, to which I was becoming a martyr. Knischen soon arrested that, and I now suffer very M'lduin I'rcim it. But I have experienced the greatest i-nnd in the correction of constant aridity of the stomach, from which I suffered from a child. I could never eat butter, nor very little fat of any kind. Now I enjoy butter especially, and eat plenty with no ill- analysis with the actual results. Hand No.1 Hearts K, J. 6, 5, 4 Clubs A. 8, 2 Diamonds A, J, 8, 4 Spades 4 Hearts A. 10. 8, 3 Clubs 9, 7, 3 Diamonds K, 10 Spades A, Q. J. S opinion. The hands of a.l four players fffects . \ have recommended Krmehen are given, so that you will thus have in hundreds of cases." A. M. W. an opportunity of comparing your! Consider for a moment the cause of your indigestion. Your internal organs have lost tone and. as a result, your gastric or digestive juices are tailing to flow freely. Your food, instead of being digested and absorbed into your system, is simply stagnating in your stomach and intestinal tract, and pro- ducing harmful acid poisons. Let it be made clear that these poisons not only give rise to the discomforts of indigestion ; they dull your brain, Hearts 9. 2 Clubs 5, 4 Diamonds Q. 9. 7, 5, 3, 2 Spades 10, 7, 3 Hearts Q, 7 Clubs K, Q, J, Ii. 6 Diamonds 6 Spades K, 9, 6. 5, 2 slat-ken your nerves, decay your teeth, infect your joints with" rheumatism and prepare the way for many other obscure conditions of ill-health. The immediate effect of the six salts in Knisehea is to promote a natural flow of the digestive and other vital juices of the body. S<K>n after you start on Knischen you will begin to> feel the benefit. You will Hud to your satisfaction that you are able to enjoy your food without any distressing after - effects. And. as you persevere with the " little daily dose." you will see that the relief which Kmschen brings is lasting relief. Knischen Salts is obtainable at all Drug stores at 45c. and T5c. per bottle. Owl Laffs 2783 No score, rubber game. Z dealt and bid one club. What should A now bid with the foregoing hand? A's proper bid at either Auction or Contract Is undoubtedly a double of Z' one club. At one table, A doubled and Y bid four clubs. This was a good bid, for it prevented A and B from bidding. It also forced A to guess as to the proper lead. He led the ace of hearts and then the ace of spades. Aa a result, Z made five-odd at clubs. At table No. 2, A bid one no trump, which Y doubled. B was on the job, however, and took A out of the double by bidding two diamonds. Z was now In a difficult position. He knew that A must have spade strength to war- | rant his no trump bid, but saw no : other way to give his partner addl- ' : tlonal information, so made the bid of , two spades. A passed, for he was sat- isfied with the two-spade bid and Y was forced to bid two no trump or three hearts. He elected to bid the aged snould never 6 out wllh Maiden Aunt "A gir! wno is en- two no trump because it seemed a safer bid than three hearts. He just made the bid so failed to make game, a big loss compared with table No. 1. This hand is a good illustration of winning by bad bidding. The proper bid with A's hand Is a double of one club. The bid of one no trump is yery faulty. The only reason A No. 2 gained by the bid was because the player of A's hand at table No. 1 made a bad opening. With a trump opening, the proper one on the bid- ding, Y Z can only make three odd In clubs. It is an ideal hand for that opening. Note that the lead of the ace of hearts, followed by the ace of spades, gives Declarer game. Study other young man." Modern Maid "Oh, it'g all right! He's engaged, too." A Chinaman opened a laundry on a street between a drug store on one side and a restaurant on the other "We Never Close.' Then the restaur- ant put up a hign which read: "Open At All Hours." The Chinaman, not to be outdone by his neighbours, put up a sign which read: "Me No Sleepy Too." Collar-studs, we read, ar never re- Here's a cunning suit for the small boy of the house. It has much unusuaincss In the way the trousers button to the blouse. The s..ilor type neckline is one all th little boys like so well. Note the collar ter- minates in scarf ends. They this bidding ar.il think over A's proper tarred to as anything but "buttons" by lead. Americans. We admire their restraint. Hand No. 2 Hearts 6. 5 Clubs 8, 4, 3 Diamonds K, Q, 10. 7. Spades 7, 3 ~, 3 A. K. Q, 7 smartly through slashed openings at | Diamonds J, 9, 4, 2 the centre-front. It can be made with Spades 9, 5' very brief sleeves or long sleeves that gather into wristbands. Light navy blue linen combined with plain white linen in the original. Loads of other attractive schemes Auction Bidding can be worked out. Several suits can Z dealt and passed. A bid one heart, Hearts J, 10, 9, 4, 2 Clubs K, 7 Diamonds none Spades K, J, 8. 6, 4, 2 Hearts 8, 3 Clubs 10, 9. 0. 5. 2 Diamonds A, S. 3 Spades A. Q. 10 Tin "What's an Appropriate gift for a telephone operator?" Tack "Why not give her some ear- rings " Pauiine "Did the hotel you stopped at last summer overlook the sea?'' Peter "Yes, completely." A youth whose sweetie used to stand in the door and wave at him, was ! asked why she didn't wave any more. be made at the price of one ready bought suit. Style No. 2783 may be had in sizes 2, 4 and 6 years. Size 4 requires 1 yard 35-inch for blouse, with \ yard 33-inch for trou- sers. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Y passed, B bid one no trump and Z and A passed. Y bid two diamonds, B passed and Z bid two spades. What should A now do with the foregoing hand? At one table A doubled two spades. On the bidding it is a certainty that B has strength in spades and yet there Is not a sure game in no trump. There- fore. A should play the certainty and ___. . ill 1 J*UMV tf***J v*v bWKMMUftd tlU'-l Write your name and address plain- double two spades rather than bid two ly, giving number and size of such no trump. By opening the king of patterns as you wanu Enclose 20c in j hearts, he should defeat Z by three stamps or coin (coin preferred; WtapjtlUkSi it carefully) for each number, and I v At the second table, the bidding of address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 W^st Adelaide St., Toronto. to see? Five >. i six springtimes .welcomed joyously, lovingly watch--d froii' the first celandine to the budding of the rose; who shall dare to call it a stinted boon? Five or six t'mes the miracle of earth reclad, the vision cf splenJor and loveliness which tongue has never yet described, set before my gazing. To think of it is to fear that I ask too much. G. Gissing. "What's all this noise about?" father demanded of one of the 'twin*. "Nanny's given me two batba Mid says I'm Freddie." Underweight? "My baby was so thin his hands were Hke bird claws. But he thrived won- jtrfully after I started giving Baby's Own Tablets," writes Mrs. L. Kennedy, Portland, Ontario. I Baby's Own Tab I lets help to regulate I stomach and bow- leb; and the thin [child gains weight. [Absolutely tafe. I 25c package. 13? Or. Wllll.mi' OWN TABLETS Books Napoleon Used this hand was entirely different. Auction Bidding Z passed, A bid one heart, Y passed, B bid one no trump and all passed. | The writer think* Y should have bid : two diamonds. This hand could not Presented to Dominion stand anr other Iead and yet was f re ., nieo to UOIT5 .mon strong enough to warrant a bid of two diamonds for the lead. As his partner hadn't bid, Z opened big fourth-best spade, which B won with the ten. He then led a low club and finessed the jaci. The only way he could get his hand Into take another club finesse was by playing either the ace of dia- Ottawa Three remarkable books, unique in the world, bave come Into the possession of the Canadian archives in Ottawa. They contain a translation into French of the voyages ot Sir Alexander Mackenzie, said to be the first white man to cross the continent of North Amerl- [ i/> fwv\ H/IM n i T ca, and they bear the Inscription, j lU.UUlMVIlle rolar 1 rip "Napoleon's Copy From St. Helena," ! Planned by Soviet and the stamp of the imperial eagle. ' Moscow. A 10,000-mile voyage from ed this translation ot voyages that he might be supplied with Information to aid him ir a pro- jected attack on British North America from the Pacific Coast. It was a fantastic scheme, of course, as apparently the Emperor learned when he read of Sir Alexander's adven- tures in exploring the sub-Arctic and crossing the Rockies. Through some unexplained means the volumes came Into possession of the Mackenzie family after Napo- leon's death. Mrs. Bernard Heald, last of the family, died recently In Sussex, England, and her husband presented th e books to the domin- ion. long arctic coast of Siberia and pass- ing through Bering Strait, is an out- standing ieature of. Russia's plans for 11 1 Was Terribly Run-Down" Says Mrs. Doughty: "Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills Built Me Up" "I U'.ieve it my Red Letter Days Grave on thy heart each past "red- letter day"; Forget not all the sunshine of the way By which the Lord hath led thee; ans- wered prayers And Joys unasked, strange blessings, lifted cares. Grand promise-echoes! Thus thy life shall be One record of His love and faithful- ness to thee. Francis Ridley Havergal. duty to tell others what wonderful results I obtained from Dr. Williams' Pink Pill?," rites Mrs. James Dough- ty, Brantford, Ont. ribly nervous and "I was in a ter- run-dowu condi- tion very pr's and with no ambition. I took three boxes ot the Pills, and I soon began to feel like a new woman. No trouble to do my housework. The Pills built me up and put me in first- class condition." Mrs. Richard Rusk. Robliii, Man., writes : "Diphtheria left our daughter, Beth, a nervous wreck. She was un- able to continue at school. I gave her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and the change in her was marvellous. She is enjoying splendid heath and we do feel that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills saved her life." Don't allow yourself or your daugh- | ter to he robbed of heath and vigour. as burglars are heard downstair-): "Sh-b, dear! This is to fc a battle of brains." Wife: "How brave of you, dear, to fo un- armed.' run-down or nervous conditions by creating new blood, which imparts health, vigour and vitality BOc t your druggist's. monds or the ace of spade*. He didn't | This was the reply: "It didn't prove to care to do either, so led a low diamond be a permanent ware. ' in the hope that Y would not cover, i ' ?_ el "! History Profes 3 or-"Wha t were the dying words of Lord Chesterfield?" Class in Unison "They satisfy.'' and throw the lead into Z's hand. Y made a big mistake by not play- ing his ten of diamonds so, when B played the eight, it held the trick, much to his surprise. From then on, j Jane "Buddy -old me I was the he had little difficulty in making a eighth wonder of the world." grand slam by forcing Z to discard either spades or hearts and thus set! up winning cards in either A's or B's ham!. Work it out for practice. If Y had played the ten of diamonds, B , co-.:ld still have made a little slam by ! allowing Y to hold the trick. No mat- ter what he leads. B can win the trick, set up his clubs and fore-; Z to discard I so that he must allow A B to win four!, heart tricks cr a spade and three 1 her mmd? Mary "What did you say?" Jane "I told him he had better not let me catch him with any of the other Ever hear the one about the man who married a Scotch wife because be hearts. Try It out for practice. Contract Bidding Grandma "It says here that young Z should pass. A should bid one i women are abandoning all restrictions. heart and Y should pass. B should bid one no trump and Z should pass. A should bid three nn trump and all \ Now, mind, don't let me catch, you yours, should pass. The play then proceeds as al Table No. 2. Both of these hands offer problems ' ' of bidding and play much above the ordinary, so study them carefully. If a man has lost an eye, a hand, or le?, he gets plenry of sympathy, but if he loses his hair it is considered a great joke. So, ha ha, and also ho ho! celebrating the second polar year" in 1932. "international Ti, eu there was the little chap who Prof. O. U.I on being sent to buy a cake of soap Schmidt, head of the All-Union Arctic insisted on having one with a high Institute, will be in charge of the ice-] perfume. "What's the idea, sonny?" breaker Sibiviakoff, which has been asked the druggUr. "Wei!, I want chosen for this exacting voyage. In announcing plan; for the trip,, [ face, so she won't make me was>h It Professor Schmidt declared that, while again." it Is hoped to make (he voyage with-] out interruption, outside of brief halts .. H , 1U) . Archk Was tue ladv t saw Cor purposes of exploration, the vessel , vou witu the other night your fiancee will carry provisions for 15 months. or vour B , ster? , .- Don - t tao ,. ? old The Sibidiakoff will carry a radio ap- man l naven . t a , ke(i her yet; . paratus and airplanes useful for scout- ing expeditions. | ^^ years of researchi Scien:ist3 As tar as Northern Land a large have discovered that the kind of hens arctic territory which Is separated tnat , uy tue Iongest are dead nens . from the northern coast of Siberia by ! ' a small strait - the SiMriakoff will! Wim]y item from TUe Commanche, have a companion ship, the icebreaker ok'.ahoma. Clarion: "The high wind Rusanoff. (damaged two school houses and injured One purpose of this expedition to three teachers. Miss Elklns, Mr. Tylie Northern Land is to take off an intre-< and Migs B ennfold. Miss Elklns had a !>id arctic natural scientist named | sab]e end blown off and was moved sii Ushakov. who with a few companions incne , on ner foundations, lias now st>ent two years in this re- mote and desolate arctic rpgion. Rubber Firewood London.- Rubber has now Joined coffee as one of the commodities be- ing used as a fuel. With rubber at less than 2d. a pound, merchants here are supplying distributors with bags of rubber cut Into narrow strips to be used as fuel for starting fires. You can hardly blame the social lion if he longs to relax once and awhile and associate with a few roughnecks. Another record ha? been broken by a glider man. Eight times In the ho- pital in one week. DESTINY Who can complain ot being com- prehended In the game dedtlny wherein all thlnga are involved? WOOL HIGHEST PRICES PAID The Canadian Wool Co. Ltd. 2 CHURCH ST.. TORONTO Classified Advertising ("* -V SIGHTLY FAT ROB3 TOU OR J ail youthful charm. Slender Tab- lets help you to rid youreelJ of unneces- sary avoirdupois. Exact formula on the box. Three weeks' treatment. 11.30. Mailed prepaid. Roy Kitchen. The '.'ar ful Chemist, Dept. L. London. 1ABT CKICX8 AVE .' HORNS, PER HUNDRED. 6 cents: Rocka s Rooks Red, 9 cents; delivered any timei Month olds 18c. Pullets, ail ages, pric l.EG- Whit* furnished. Ont. Model Hatchery. CAZTABIAJT CMXCKB. LEGHORNS, 8c; BARRED HOCK3. iOc; Minorca*, White Roclis. lie) Hi per cent, books order. Pletsca Hatchery, Stratford, Rout* B. Ontario. WXEXXiT WOULD LEASE WEEKJ." NEWS- PAPER In Ontario. ^end oar ticulars :a Box 10. W.lscn P-bhsUirj C' Ltd.. Toronto. MOTOB BOAT FOB BAB. n 1 C H R D SON DOUBLE :A.BiM cruiser, about thirty Ttet, in U5 altogether only four or flv n:onth la .wo seasons; complete equipment mclu U i.ig carpets, bed and table i.neo, china, glaasnrare and silver as well e all mar- Ira enulpment and many extras. Thi cruiser with Its two cabins and its ,U equipped galley Is an unus-;ali7 comfort- able boat for week-ends cr longer cruises for four to six people, i.: Is ex- ceptionally seaworthy and .".as cruised all over the Great Lakes, it has a nlffix class and very economical 60 borMpowtf, six-cylinder power plant with conipletj electric lighting throughout and jpeed of 12 to 14 miles per hour, i: !s a JP- lal pair.t <ob and very attractive in ap- pearance. Owner will sacrifice for naif its original cost. H. \Va:H.is. T3 W. Adelaide St.. Toronto. Men Wanted Average $40.00 Weekly Earning* .len wanted to sell our Special i?on- sf-J.-ieU SerMce Shoes and Safety Shoes to r-.nrage Men. Meohan * Railroad Men. Also complete line or Drest and Spirt Shoes. The Mne5-c and most complete lines of -len a Foot-near !n Oan.ido. No experience necessary, we teach you how Writ today for <-omplte free selling outfit. Dexter Shoe Company Urn . ept. W.. P.O. Box 723. Montr; Mother's Hope Youth fades. Poverty. ?a: u.e. mis- fortune may come, but. -hr':tii if all, Mother's love endures. comes, she is hap y. But of shortcomings can shake one ioti M 's hope and love. All with the four sea< . Confucius. T Shampoo Regularly n//i ^ ClTICl A SOAP 1 Prerede by Appllrailttn* ( emcm A OI>T>II*T 1 Soap 23c. Ointment 25c. anil .".i.-. i , f NEURALGIA A f.-i-i: pplicilion of Mm- ird I. iccording to d;r,' on'. I ju "hii lh pot '._\ou'll I find you V - get wonderful relief ! The be< you can buy for BILIOUSNESS SICK HEADACHES Sold everywhere in 25c and 7Sc r*d (*. ISSUE No. 24 *32